Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 20 de 41
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
2.
Toxicol Lett ; 173(3): 191-200, 2007 Sep 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17855028

ABSTRACT

The potential toxicity of tire debris organic extracts on human alveolar epithelial cells (A549) was investigated. We analysed time- and dose dependent modifications produced on plasma membrane molecular composition and on lipid microdomains expression (caveolae and lipid rafts) that represent specific signalling platforms. Cells were exposed to increasing organic extract concentrations (10, 60 and 75mug/ml) for 24, 48 and 72h. An up to three fold dose and time dependent increase in specific protein markers of lipid microdomains was found, suggesting a corresponding increase in signalling platforms. Since the total pool of these plasma membrane markers was unchanged, we supposed that these proteins were translocated within the plasma membrane as to assemble the newly formed lipid microdomains. Despite no major modifications in lipid bilayer composition, a time- and dose dependent toxic effect was documented at 48h of exposure by an increase of cells positive to Trypan Blue assay. After 48h a dose dependent increase in the cell medium of the cytosolic enzyme lactate dehydrogenase was also observed, indicating greater damage of the plasma membrane as prenecrotic sign. The overall ultrastructural morphology of the plasma membrane of treated cells was not greatly modified, suggesting that organic extracts from tire debris cause focalized discontinuities on cell surfaces.


Subject(s)
Environmental Pollutants/toxicity , Epithelial Cells/drug effects , Lung/drug effects , Membrane Microdomains/drug effects , Rubber/toxicity , Caveolae/drug effects , Cell Line, Tumor , Cell Membrane Permeability/drug effects , Cell Survival/drug effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Epithelial Cells/ultrastructure , Humans , Lung/metabolism , Lung/ultrastructure , Membrane Lipids/metabolism , Membrane Microdomains/metabolism , Membrane Microdomains/ultrastructure , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Protein Transport/drug effects , Signal Transduction/drug effects , Time Factors
3.
J Neurosci Res ; 85(2): 443-50, 2007 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17086551

ABSTRACT

Changes in the composition of cell fractions, and in particular of detergent-resistant membranes (DRM) isolated from cultured rat cerebellar granule cells, were taken as possible changes in lipid raft composition during a signal transduction event. After activation of protein kinase C (PKC) with phorbol esters (PMA) or glutamate, the content of PKC and of proteins highly enriched (GAP43, Fyn, and PrP(c)) or not (MARCKS) in DRM was followed. PKC activation strongly increased its association with membranes (from 2% to 75%), causing its enrichment within DRM; the substrate GAP43, enriched in DRM, remained membrane associated, but its proportion in DRM dramatically decreased (from about 40% to 2.5%), suggesting its shift from raft to nonraft membranes, possibly as a consequence of phosphorylation by PKC. The distribution of Fyn and PrP(c) (DRM-enriched) and of MARCKS (present mainly outside DRM) did not change. PKC activation was followed by an increase of GAP43 and MARCKS phosphorylation (about 7- and 8-fold, respectively). Noteworthy was that, after cell treatment with the lipid raft-disrupting drug methyl-beta-cyclodextrin, PKC activation occurred normally, followed by MARCKS phosphorylation, but GAP43 phosphorylation did not occur. Taken altogether, these data suggest that the integrity of lipid rafts is necessary for PKC to affect GAP43 and catalyze its phosphorylation.


Subject(s)
Membrane Microdomains/chemistry , Membrane Microdomains/metabolism , Neurons/chemistry , Neurons/enzymology , Protein Kinase C/metabolism , Animals , Blotting, Western , Cells, Cultured , Enzyme Activation/drug effects , Enzyme Activation/physiology , Glutamic Acid/toxicity , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate/toxicity
4.
Eur J Biochem ; 267(13): 4187-97, 2000 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10866823

ABSTRACT

Cultures of MDCK II and human fibroblast cells were fed radioactive sphingosine and a radioactive GM3 ganglioside derivative containing a photoactivable group. The derived cell homogenates were treated with Triton X-100 and fractionated by sucrose-gradient centrifugation to prepare a detergent-insoluble membrane fraction known to be enriched in sphingolipid and caveolin-1, i.e. of caveolae. The detergent-insoluble membrane fraction prepared after feeding [1-3H]sphingosine to cells, was found to be highly enriched, with respect to protein content, in metabolically radiolabeled sphingomyelin and glycosphingolipids (about 18-fold). By feeding cells photoactivable radioactive GM3, after 2 h-chase, caveolin-1, CAV1, and proteins of high molecular mass became cross-linked to GM3, the cross-linking complexes being highly concentrated in the detergent-insoluble membrane fraction. The interaction between the ganglioside derivative and CAV1 was a time-dependent, transient process so that CAV1 cross-linking to GM3 was hardly detectable after a 24-h chase followed the pulse time. After a 24-h chase, only the high molecular mass proteins cross-linked to GM3 could be clearly observed. These results suggest that a portion of the GM3 administered to cells enters caveolae and moves to the glycosphingolipid domains, or enters caveolae that are then rapidly catabolized. Electron microscopy of cells in a culture immunostained with a monoclonal antibody to GM3 and a secondary gold-conjugated antibody detected several clusters of gangliosides on the plasma membranes separate from caveolae; gangliosides located inside the caveolae could not be detected. Scanning confocal microscopy of cells immunostained with anti-GM3 and anti-CAV1 Ig showed only a very small overlap with the CAV1 and GM3 signals. Thus, the biochemical and microscopic studies suggest that caveolae contain at most a low level of gangliosides and are separate from the GM3 ganglioside enriched domains.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/chemistry , Gangliosides/analysis , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Fibroblasts/chemistry , Humans , Molecular Weight , Sphingosine/metabolism
5.
J Biol Chem ; 275(14): 9978-85, 2000 Apr 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10744673

ABSTRACT

After incubation of intact living cultured rat cerebellar granule cells at 37 degrees C with a new GM1 ganglioside analog, carrying a diazirine group and labeled with (125)I in the ceramide moiety, followed by photoactivation, a relatively small number of radiolabeled proteins were detected in a membrane-enriched fraction. A protein of about 55 kDa with a pI of about 5 carried a large portion of the radioactivity even if incubation and cross-linking were performed at 4 degrees C and in the presence of inhibitors of endocytosis, suggesting that it is cross-linked at the plasma membrane. Immunoprecipitation and Western blotting experiments showed the positivity of this protein for tubulin. Trypsin treatment of intact cells ruled out the involvement of a plasma membrane surface tubulin. Release of radioactivity from cross-linked tubulin after KOH treatment (but not hydroxylamine treatment) suggested that the photoactivated ganglioside reacts with an ester-linked fatty acid anchor of tubulin. Low buoyancy, detergent-resistant membrane fractions, isolated from cells after incubation with the GM1 analogue and photoactivation, proved their enrichment in endogenous and radioactive GM1 ganglioside, sphingomyelin, cholesterol, signal transduction proteins, and tubulin. It is noteworthy that radioactive tubulin was also detected in this fraction, indicating the presence of tubulin molecules carrying a fatty acid anchor in detergent-resistant, ganglioside-enriched domains of the plasma membrane. Parallel experiments carried out with a phosphatidylcholine analogue, also carrying a diazirine group and labeled with (125)I in the fatty acid moiety, showed the specificity of tubulin interaction with GM1. Taken together, these results indicate that some tubulin molecules are associated with a lipid anchor to detergent-resistant glycolipid-enriched domains of the plasma membrane. This novel feature of membrane domains can provide a key for a better understanding of their biological role.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cerebellum/metabolism , G(M1) Ganglioside/metabolism , Glycolipids/metabolism , Membrane Lipids/metabolism , Neurons/metabolism , Tubulin/metabolism , Animals , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Cells, Cultured , Cerebellum/cytology , Chromatography, Thin Layer , Cross-Linking Reagents , Detergents , G(M1) Ganglioside/chemistry , Glycolipids/chemistry , Membrane Lipids/chemistry , Membrane Lipids/isolation & purification , Neurons/cytology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Trypsin , Tubulin/chemistry , Tubulin/isolation & purification
6.
Glycoconj J ; 17(3 -4): 215-22, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11201793

ABSTRACT

A new photoactivable, radioactive derivative of ganglioside GM1 has been utilized to assess lipid distribution in the caveolae bilayer, taking advantage of the ability of the glycolipid, endogenous or exogenously added, to concentrate within this membrane compartment and to crosslink neighboring molecules upon illumination. After insertion into A431 plasma membrane and photoactivation, a membrane-enriched and a detergent-resistant fraction, enriched in gangliosides, sphingomyelin and cholesterol, were isolated. While a few radioactive proteins were detected in the membrane-enriched fraction, only radioactive caveolin was detected in the detergent-resistant fraction, indicating at the same time the enrichment of this fraction in caveolae and the presence of ganglioside within this compartment. Among lipids, crosslinked phosphatidylcholine, sphingomyelin and cholesterol were detected in the membrane-enriched fraction, while only crosslinked sphingomyelin was detected in the detergent-resistant fraction. These results suggest the enrichment in sphingomyelin - along with ganglioside - within the outer leaflet, and the preferential localization of cholesterol within the endoplasmic leaflet, of the caveolae bilayer.


Subject(s)
Caveolae/chemistry , Lipid Bilayers/chemistry , Photochemistry/methods , Caveolae/metabolism , Caveolins/metabolism , Cell Line , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cholesterol/chemistry , Cholesterol/metabolism , Cross-Linking Reagents/chemistry , Detergents/chemistry , G(M1) Ganglioside/analogs & derivatives , G(M1) Ganglioside/chemistry , Humans , Lipid Metabolism , Lipids/analysis , Phosphatidylcholines/chemistry , Phosphatidylcholines/metabolism , Proteins/analysis , Proteins/chemistry , Sphingomyelins/chemistry , Sphingomyelins/metabolism
7.
Biochem J ; 344 Pt 1: 177-84, 1999 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10548548

ABSTRACT

Dynamic changes of glycolipid domains within the plasma membranes of cultured rat cerebellar granule cells have been investigated. For this purpose, a pyrene-labelled derivative of G(M1) ganglioside has been incorporated in the cell plasma membrane, and the rate of excimer formation, directly related to the formation of domains, has been studied by a fluorescence imaging technique (excimer-formation imaging). Fluorescence imaging showed that upon addition of 100 microM glutamate, indirectly inducing the activation of protein kinase C (PKC), glycolipid concentration within domains increases in cell bodies. Comparable effects were exerted by the addition of PMA, directly inducing the activation of PKC. On the contrary, the phorbol ester was not effective in the presence of the specific PKC inhibitor, bisindolylmaleimide. These results suggest that glycolipid-enriched domains are dynamic supramolecular structures affected by membrane-associated events, such as PKC activation. Dynamic changes of domains could be important in modulating their postulated participation in a series of functions, including signal transduction and lipid/protein sorting.


Subject(s)
Glycolipids/chemistry , Membrane Lipids/chemistry , Neurons/chemistry , Animals , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Cell Membrane/drug effects , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Cerebellum/chemistry , Cerebellum/cytology , Cerebellum/metabolism , Endocytosis , Enzyme Activation/drug effects , Fluorescence Polarization , Fluorescent Dyes , Glycolipids/metabolism , Membrane Fluidity , Membrane Lipids/metabolism , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Neurons/drug effects , Neurons/metabolism , Protein Kinase C/metabolism , Rats , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate/pharmacology
8.
J Neurochem ; 73(1): 1-11, 1999 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10386949

ABSTRACT

Recent years have been characterized by a booming interest in research on caveolae and caveolae-like membrane domains. The interest in this subject grew further, when their involvement in fundamental membrane-associated events, such as signal transmission and lipid/protein sorting, was postulated. Substantial progress has been reached in understanding the biological role of membrane domains in eukaryotic cells. The neuron, however, which perhaps represents one of the greatest challenges to research on membrane traffic and function, has only been partially investigated. The purpose of the present review is to survey this issue in the nervous system. We confine ourselves to the presence of membrane domains in the nervous system and discuss this in the context of three facts: first, glycolipids are peculiarly enriched in both caveolae and caveolae-like domains and are particularly abundant in the nervous system; second, the neuron is characterized by a basic dual polarity, similar in this respect to other polarized cells, where the role of glycolipid-enriched domains for lipid/protein sorting has been better ascertained; and third, neurons evolved from, and are related to, simpler eukaryotic cells, allowing us to find analogies with more investigated nonneuronal cells.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/ultrastructure , Glycolipids/analysis , Nervous System/ultrastructure , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Humans , Membrane Lipids/analysis , Nervous System Diseases/etiology , Nervous System Diseases/therapy , Neuroglia/chemistry , Neuroglia/ultrastructure , Neurons/chemistry , Neurons/ultrastructure
9.
Arch Dermatol Res ; 291(4): 232-7, 1999 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10335921

ABSTRACT

We studied the possibility of supplementing human keratinocytes with exogenous lipids (phospholipids, sphingolipids and cholesterol) and evaluated their influence on cell proliferation, using cells cultured in vitro. Experiments carried out with liposomes composed of cholesterol/GM1 ganglioside and different phospholipids (5:1.5:10, M/M/M), showed that liposomes associated with cells more efficiently when they contained soya lecithin. The treatment with liposomes made of the ternary mixture did not modify the rate of cell proliferation, as assessed by the incorporation of [3H]-thymidine. In contrast, the proliferation rate strongly decreased (65% with respect to the control) using the same liposomes without GM1. Experiments carried out with GM1 alone showed a strong stimulation of the proliferation rate (144% with respect to the control). Fluorescence dequenching experiments, carried out with the probe octadecyl rhodamine B chloride, showed that fusion was the main mechanism of liposome-cell interaction. Metabolic studies established that exogenously administered GM1--either embedded in liposomes or as a pure glycolipid dispersion--led to the production of several products, including ceramide. Altogether, these results show that different, opposing effects can be exerted on cell proliferation by the administration of lipids, separately or in mixtures, to human keratinocytes, and indicate the importance of a correct formulation for supplementing human keratinocytes with exogenous lipids.


Subject(s)
Keratinocytes/drug effects , Liposomes/pharmacology , Cells, Cultured , Cholesterol/metabolism , Cholesterol/pharmacology , G(M1) Ganglioside/metabolism , G(M1) Ganglioside/pharmacology , Humans , Keratinocytes/chemistry , Keratinocytes/metabolism , Liposomes/chemistry , Liposomes/metabolism , Membrane Lipids/chemistry , Membrane Lipids/metabolism , Phospholipids/metabolism , Phospholipids/pharmacology , Thymidine/metabolism , Time Factors , Tritium
10.
Biosci Rep ; 19(5): 385-95, 1999 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10763806

ABSTRACT

Specialized domains, displaying a peculiar lipid and protein composition, are present within the plasma membrane of mammalian cells and play a pivotal role in fundamental membrane-associated events. Among lipids, sphingolipids (in particular glycolipids and sphingomyelin) are characteristically enriched within such domains. Moreover, a series of functionally related proteins is present, suggesting the involvement of these membrane structures in the mechanism of signal transduction and lipid/protein sorting. An increasing body of evidence suggests that domains are dynamic structures, and that their dynamic fluctuations can modulate the activity of domain-associated proteins through changes of glycolipid protein interaction. Even if a large body of experimental investigation has been carried out on eukaryotic cells, only little attention has been paid to the neuron. The purpose of the present review is to summarize the observations implying a functional role of glycolipid-enriched domains in cultured rat cerebellar granule cells.


Subject(s)
Glycolipids/physiology , Membrane Proteins/physiology , Nerve Growth Factors/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Signal Transduction , Animals , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Cell Membrane/physiology , Cells, Cultured , Cerebellum/cytology , Cerebellum/physiology , Glycolipids/chemistry , Membrane Proteins/chemistry , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Rats
11.
FEBS Lett ; 439(1-2): 93-6, 1998 Nov 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9849885

ABSTRACT

We verified the hypothesis that changes in the endogenous GM1 ganglioside density in the environment of TrkB, receptor of brain-derived neurotrophic factor, can affect receptor activity, and focused on rat cerebellar granule cells expressing both GM1 and TrkB. Changes of the amount of GM1 associated to immunoprecipitated TrkB and of receptor tyrosine phosphorylation were evaluated after treatment with phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (1 microM, 7 min), reported to affect the plasma membrane distribution of endogenous gangliosides in the same cells. After treatment, the amount of GM1 associated to receptor and TrkB phosphorylation decreased by about 40%. The amount of associated GM1 decreased by about 33% also after concomitant treatment with phorbol ester and brain-derived neurotrophic factor, but in this case the neurotrophin was unable to enhance receptor tyrosine phosphorylation. These results for the first time suggest that changes in the amount of endogenous GM1 in the environment of TrkB can modulate receptor activity, and offer new clues for a better understanding of physiological and pathological events of the nervous system.


Subject(s)
G(M1) Ganglioside/metabolism , Neurons/metabolism , Receptor Protein-Tyrosine Kinases/metabolism , Receptors, Nerve Growth Factor/metabolism , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Phosphorylation , Precipitin Tests , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Receptor, Ciliary Neurotrophic Factor , Tyrosine/metabolism
12.
Acta Biochim Pol ; 45(2): 393-401, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9821870

ABSTRACT

An increasing body of evidence suggests that glycolipid domains are present on the plasma membrane surface of mammalian cells and play a key role in signal transduction. We have investigated the modulation of glycolipid-protein interaction consequent to a specific event occurring at the plasma membrane. For this purpose, a new photoactivable, radioactive derivative of GM1 ganglioside, carrying a phenyldiazirine fatty acid labelled with 125I, has been used with rat cerebellar granule cells in culture. Upon incubation of photoactivable GM1 with the cells followed by illumination, several proteins become radioactive and were detectable on the two dimensional-electrophoresis, which points to their interaction with the ganglioside. Upon addition of cytotoxic doses of glutamate, known to induce indirectly the activation of protein kinase C (PKC), one of the proteins crosslinked by photoactivable GM1 in control cells of molecular mass about 92 kDa and pI about 4, was not anymore detectable; this suggests its exclusion from the glycolipid domains. On the contrary, another protein, of about 15 kDa and pI 6.5, previously not crosslinked, was interacting with the ganglioside derivative after glutamate treatment. Comparable effects were exerted by phorbol-2-myristate-3-acetate, which directly induces the activation of PKC. These results show that PKC activation, a key step of inbound trans-membrane signalling, affects the interaction between glycolipids and proteins at the plasma membrane surface, possibly within a mixed domain. The dynamic modulation of ganglioside-protein interaction may affect the involvement of glycolipid domains in membrane-located events such as signal transmission and lipid/protein sorting.


Subject(s)
Cerebellum/metabolism , G(M1) Ganglioside/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Animals , Glycolipids/metabolism , Iodine Radioisotopes , Protein Kinase C/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
13.
Biochemistry ; 37(9): 3143-8, 1998 Mar 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9485467

ABSTRACT

While the mechanism of signal transduction across the plasma membrane from the exo- to the endoplasmic side has been extensively investigated, the possible return of messages back to the outer layer is less known. We studied the effect of protein kinase C activation on the ganglioside accessibility at the exoplasmic face of intact rat cerebellar granule cells in culture, using the enzyme sialidase as the probing molecule. Under the experimental conditions (1 milliunit/mL enzyme, 2 min incubation at 37 degreesC), only GT1b and GD1a gangliosides were partially affected by the enzyme (28.6 and 25.7% hydrolysis, respectively). After cell treatment with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, inducing protein kinase C activation, GT1b and GD1a ganglioside susceptibility to sialidase was strongly decreased (8.6 and 15.9% hydrolysis, respectively). A reduction of ganglioside hydrolysis was also observed when protein kinase C activation was induced by cell treatment for 15 min with 100 microM glutamate. On the contrary, accessibility did not vary when protein kinase C translocation was not effective (either in the absence of Ca2+ in the medium or using 1 microM glutamate) or when the kinase activity was inhibited by staurosporine. These data suggest that following PKC activation, a key step of inbound transmembrane signaling, cell may dispatch outbound messages to the plasma membrane outer layer, changing the selective recognition and crypticity of glycolipids at the cell surface, possibly through a modulation of their segregation state.


Subject(s)
Gangliosides/metabolism , Neurons/metabolism , Animals , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cells, Cultured , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Enzyme Activation , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Glutamic Acid/pharmacology , Neuraminidase/metabolism , Protein Kinase C/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Signal Transduction , Staurosporine/pharmacology , Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate/pharmacology , Vibrio cholerae/enzymology
14.
J Neurosci Res ; 50(4): 643-8, 1997 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9404725

ABSTRACT

The ganglioside composition of the cerebral hemispheres of young and adult rats of either sex has been herein assessed for the first time. In females, the total ganglioside content at any age, the content of GM1, GD1a, and GD1b at 8 days, and the content of GM1, GD1b, GT1b, and GQ1b at 60 days were higher in the right than in the left hemisphere. In males, no difference was observed. Concerning the ceramide moiety, a difference was displayed by C18:1 long-chain base in GD1a, whose proportion was higher in the left than in the right hemisphere of females aged 8 days. The comparison between homolateral hemispheres of rats of different sex revealed several differences. On average, in 8-day-old animals, the content of gangliosides was higher in females than in males. At 60 days the amount of gangliosides was on average lower in females than in males, even if with some exception. The data obtained with the current investigation show the existence of a ganglioside lateralization in rat brain, exclusively in females, and almost entirely at charge of the oligosaccharide portion. Moreover, age-dependent changes of ganglioside pattern and content show a dependence on brain lateralization.


Subject(s)
Brain Chemistry/physiology , Functional Laterality/physiology , Gangliosides/analysis , Sex Characteristics , Aging/metabolism , Animals , Female , Male , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
15.
Biochemistry ; 36(30): 9232-6, 1997 Jul 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9230056

ABSTRACT

The thermotropic behavior of palmitoylsphingomyelin vesicles containing GM1 ganglioside and cholesterol has been investigated by high-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry. The thermograms exhibited by binary palmitoylsphingomyelin/GM1 mixtures are resolvable into two components. The relative contribution of the minor component, undetectable in the absence of ganglioside, to the total enthalpy and its transition temperature (>40 degrees C) increase with the concentration of the glycolipid embedded in the vesicles. These data suggest the occurrence of lateral phase separation and that more ordered, higher melting GM1 ganglioside-enriched domains are present within the sphingomyelin bilayer. Studies on binary sphingomyelin/cholesterol mixtures confirmed the known tendency of the sterol to decrease the total enthalpy of sphingomyelin, forming cholesterol-enriched domains. The thermograms exhibited by ternary sphingomyelin/ganglioside/cholesterol mixtures in variable proportions (up to 20% molar GM1 or Chol) displayed, on increasing the content of either the sterol or the ganglioside, features addressable to sphingomyelin/cholesterol (peaks centered at temperature 40 degrees C), respectively. This trend was confirmed by deconvolution analysis, showing that the thermograms are resolvable into components addressable to GM1-enriched and to cholesterol-enriched domains. Taken all together, the results show that the architectural features of sphingomyelin bilayers are strongly dependent on the presence of GM1 ganglioside and cholesterol, whose presence is leading to the formation of separate, GM1-enriched and cholesterol-enriched distinct domains. Ganglioside-sphingomyelin and sphingomyelin-cholesterol, together with mutual ganglioside-ganglioside, interactions could contribute to maintain a network of bonds extending to proteins, forming specialized membrane domains, such as caveolae, or others, whose experimental clues are the glycolipid-enriched detergent-insoluble fractions that can be isolated from cell membranes.


Subject(s)
Cholesterol/chemistry , G(M1) Ganglioside/chemistry , Lipid Bilayers/chemistry , Sphingomyelins/chemistry , Thermodynamics , Animals , Calorimetry, Differential Scanning , Cattle , Liposomes
16.
Alcohol ; 13(3): 291-5, 1996.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8734845

ABSTRACT

Rats of two different ages (2 and 7 months) were treated with an ethanol-containing liquid diet for 24 days and change of the ceramide composition of gangliosides were studied in the brain synaptosomal, microsomal and myelin fractions. Greater differences were observed in the younger age, where ethanol treatment caused a significant increase of C20:1 LCB in GM1 ganglioside of synaptosomes and microsomes and in GD1a of myelin.


Subject(s)
Brain/drug effects , Brain/ultrastructure , Ethanol/pharmacology , Gangliosides/chemistry , Subcellular Fractions/chemistry , Animals , Ceramides/chemistry , Ceramides/isolation & purification , Ethanol/administration & dosage , Male , Microsomes/chemistry , Microsomes/drug effects , Myelin Sheath/chemistry , Myelin Sheath/drug effects , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Subcellular Fractions/drug effects , Synaptosomes/chemistry , Synaptosomes/drug effects
17.
FEBS Lett ; 383(3): 223-6, 1996 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8925900

ABSTRACT

The dependence of CMP-N-acetylneuraminate:GM1 sialyltransferase (SAT IV) activity of rat liver Golgi apparatus on GM1 ganglioside ceramide composition was evaluated. SAT IV activity was assayed on GM1 molecular species carrying homogeneous ceramide moieties containing long chain bases of different length (18 or 20 C atoms) unsaturated or not, linked to 14:0, 16:0, 18:0 or 22:0 fatty acids. The results obtained in the presence of the detergent Triton CF-54, when enzyme and substrate are presumably part of the same supramolecular structure, show that either the long chain base or the fatty acid composition can affect enzyme activity. This feature was not displayed when GM1 was embedded in dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine vesicles in the absence of detergent. Under the latter conditions, the enzyme was not sensitive to the lipid composition of GM1 but to the ganglioside/phospholipid ratio in the vesicles. These results indicate for the first time that SAT IV is affected by the lipid composition of the substrate and strengthen the hypothesis that glycosyltranferases may contribute to control the cellular glycosphingolipid ceramide pattern.


Subject(s)
Ceramides/metabolism , G(M1) Ganglioside/metabolism , Liver/enzymology , Sialyltransferases/metabolism , Animals , Ceramides/chemistry , G(M1) Ganglioside/chemistry , Golgi Apparatus/enzymology , Kinetics , Male , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Substrate Specificity
18.
Neurochem Int ; 28(2): 183-7, 1996 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8719707

ABSTRACT

The ganglioside mixture from the cerebellum of young, 6 month old and two years old rats, was fractionated by reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography, each ganglioside homogeneous in the oligosaccharide chain as well as in the long-chain base being subsequently quantified. Two long-chain bases, LCB, were components of the five major gangliosides GM1, GD1a, GD1b, GT1b and GQ1b, these being the C18:1 LCB and C20:1 LCB. The content of C20:1 ganglioside molecular species was lower than that of the C18:1 one. In very young animals, day 8, the C20:1 ganglioside species represented about 8% of the total ganglioside content, then they progressively increased and reached, at 2 years, about 42% of the total. C18:1 GD1a and C18:1 GT1b, were the major species in young animals and reached their highest content at day 29, being 1.45 and 1.28 nmol/mg protein, respectively. The content of these two species decreased in adult and old animals and at two years it was 0.71 and 0.82 nmol/mg protein, respectively.


Subject(s)
Aging/metabolism , Cerebellum/growth & development , Cerebellum/metabolism , Gangliosides/metabolism , Animals , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Gangliosides/chemistry , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet
19.
FEBS Lett ; 375(1-2): 11-4, 1995 Nov 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7498456

ABSTRACT

Previous studies have shown that sphingolipids may be enriched in caveolae, plasmalemmal invaginations implicated in endocytosis and signal transduction. We synthesised a radiolabeled derivative of ganglioside GM1 bearing a photo-reactive cross-linker at the end of its acyl chain. After insertion in the plasma membrane of cultured A431 or MDCK cells and photoactivation, the main protein cross-linked by the GM1 derivative was VIP21-caveolin, an essential structural component of caveolae. This result shows close proximity between GM1 molecules and VIP21-caveolin in the caveolar membrane and strongly implicates sphingolipid segregation in the biogenesis of caveolae.


Subject(s)
Carrier Proteins/metabolism , Caveolins , Cross-Linking Reagents/pharmacology , G(M1) Ganglioside/analogs & derivatives , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Autoradiography , Carbohydrate Sequence , Carrier Proteins/drug effects , Carrier Proteins/isolation & purification , Caveolin 1 , Cell Line , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Dogs , Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional , Humans , Kidney , Membrane Proteins/drug effects , Membrane Proteins/isolation & purification , Molecular Sequence Data , Tritium , Tumor Cells, Cultured
20.
Mol Chem Neuropathol ; 26(2): 159-69, 1995 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8573241

ABSTRACT

The aim of this study was to investigate the lipid content and composition of rat cerebellar granule cells grown in the presence of ethanol (40, 55, or 80 mM) during in vitro differentiation. Quantitative analyses showed no effects of 40 mM ethanol, whereas a significant increase of total cholesterol was observed at 55 mM. Cells exposed to the highest ethanol dose (80 mM) were characterized by a higher sialidase activity, and by the modification of the ganglioside pattern and phospholipid fatty acid composition. The observed modifications were accompanied by changes of membrane anisotropy fluorescence assessed by the fluorescent probe 1,6-diphenyl-1,3,5-hexatriene.


Subject(s)
Cerebellum/drug effects , Ethanol/pharmacology , Neurons/drug effects , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Cerebellum/cytology , Fluorescence Polarization , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Time Factors
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...